
El Nido isn’t just about beaches and island hopping — it has a vibrant local food scene that most tourists miss entirely. Beyond the tourist restaurants on Calle Hama, the town’s streets and markets are packed with cheap, delicious Filipino street food that gives you a real taste of Palawan life. This guide covers the best street food in El Nido, where to find it, and what to expect to pay in 2026.
| Street Food | Price Range | Where to Find | Best Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grilled seafood (inihaw) | ₱80–200/piece | Corong-Corong beachfront | Evening (5–9pm) |
| Isaw (grilled chicken intestines) | ₱10–15/stick | Public market area | Afternoon–evening |
| Balut (fertilized duck egg) | ₱20–25 | Street vendors, market | Evening |
| Fishball / squidball | ₱5–10/piece | Near public market | Afternoon |
| Taho (silken tofu snack) | ₱20–30 | Morning street vendors | Early morning |
| Kakanin (rice cakes) | ₱15–30 | Public market | Morning |
| Halo-halo | ₱60–100 | Carenderias, market stalls | Afternoon |
| Lechon (roast pork) | ₱80–150/100g | Market, special occasions | Lunch |
Table of Contents
Grilled Seafood at Corong-Corong
The best street food experience in El Nido is the evening grilled seafood strip at Corong-Corong Beach. From around 5pm, local vendors set up grills along the beachfront, cooking fresh catch to order. You can choose your fish, squid, or prawns from the display and have it grilled on the spot.
- What to order: Whole grilled fish (lapu-lapu, maya-maya), squid (pusit), tiger prawns
- Price: ₱80–200 per piece depending on size and type
- Tip: Pair with garlic rice (sinangag) and a cold San Miguel beer from a nearby sari-sari store
- Location: 15-minute walk from El Nido town center along the beach road
El Nido Public Market
The El Nido public market (near the town center) is the hub of local food life. Early mornings are best — vendors sell fresh produce, dried fish, and cooked breakfast foods. Look for:
- Taho vendors — the classic Filipino morning snack of silken tofu with arnibal (brown sugar syrup) and sago pearls (₱20–30)
- Kakanin stalls — sticky rice cakes like puto, kutsinta, and bibingka (₱15–30 each)
- Sinangag at itlog — garlic fried rice with egg, the Filipino breakfast staple (₱40–60)
- Fresh lumpia — fresh spring rolls with vegetables and pork (₱25–40)
Carenderias: The Local Canteen Experience
Carenderias are small Filipino canteen-style eateries where you point at pre-cooked dishes and pay by the plate. They’re the cheapest way to eat well in El Nido — a full meal costs ₱80–150. Look for carenderias on the side streets off the main Calle Hama strip.
What to order:
- Adobo (chicken or pork in vinegar-soy sauce) — the Filipino national dish
- Sinigang (sour tamarind soup with fish or pork)
- Kare-kare (oxtail in peanut sauce)
- Pinakbet (mixed vegetables with shrimp paste)
- Fried bangus (milkfish) — a Palawan staple
Isaw and Barbecue Sticks
In the late afternoon and evening, street vendors near the public market set up charcoal grills selling isaw (grilled chicken intestines), betamax (congealed chicken blood), and various barbecue sticks. These are quintessential Filipino street snacks — cheap, smoky, and delicious with vinegar dipping sauce.
- Price: ₱10–15 per stick
- Best time: 3–8pm
- Tip: Ask for the spicy vinegar dip (suka with sili)
Seafood by the Kilo at the Fish Port
El Nido’s small fish port (near the main pier) is where fishing boats unload their catch in the early morning. Some vendors sell directly to the public — you can buy fresh fish, squid, and shellfish by the kilo at prices far below restaurant rates, then take it to a nearby carenderia to have it cooked for a small fee (₱50–100 cooking charge).
- Best time: 5–8am when boats return
- What to buy: Tanigue (Spanish mackerel), lapu-lapu (grouper), fresh squid, clams
Halo-Halo: The Ultimate Filipino Dessert
After a hot day of island hopping, nothing beats a bowl of halo-halo — the iconic Filipino shaved ice dessert loaded with sweetened beans, jellies, leche flan, ube ice cream, and more. Several market stalls and small shops in El Nido town serve it for ₱60–100.
Street Food Safety Tips
- Stick to freshly cooked items — avoid pre-cooked food that’s been sitting out for hours
- Grilled seafood at Corong-Corong is generally very safe — it’s cooked to order over live coals
- Bring hand sanitizer — not all street food stalls have handwashing facilities
- Drink bottled water only — tap water in El Nido is not safe to drink
- If your stomach is sensitive, start with cooked-to-order items before trying raw or fermented foods
Budget Street Food Day in El Nido
| Meal | What to Eat | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Breakfast | Taho + sinangag at itlog from market | ₱60–80 |
| Lunch | Carenderia meal (rice + 2 dishes) | ₱100–150 |
| Afternoon snack | Halo-halo + fishballs | ₱80–100 |
| Dinner | Grilled seafood at Corong-Corong + beer | ₱250–400 |
| Total | ₱490–730/day |
Eating street food and carenderias is the best way to keep food costs under ₱800/day in El Nido. For more budget tips, see our El Nido budget travel guide.
Related Guides
- El Nido Restaurants & Food Guide 2026
- El Nido Vegan & Vegetarian Food Guide
- El Nido Budget Travel Guide 2026
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